Luongo perfect again as Canucks blank Wild

Nov 9, 2008 - 7:33 AM
VANCOUVER, British Columbia (Ticker) -- Like the two teams
before them, the Minnesota Wild had no solution for Roberto
Luongo.

Luongo made 29 saves for his third consecutive shutout as the
Vancouver Canucks topped the Wild, 2-0, on Saturday.

The team captain, Luongo turned aside seven shots in the first
period, 12 in the second and 10 in the third en route to his
league-leading fifth shutout of the season and 43rd career. The
two-time All-Star, who posted a franchise-record scoreless
streak of 210 minutes, 34 seconds last season, has kept
opponents off the scoreboard for 201:08 during his current run
of perfection.

"It's nice to have, but we played a big game tonight," Luongo
said. "I think it was an important game for us, and we got two
points battling. No matter how we got it, we got two points,
and (the shutout) was just an added bonus."

"I thought we could have scored, easy, four goals, and we
didn't," Wild coach Jacques Lemaire said. "He's proven himself
to be one of the best goalies, so what can you do?"

Luongo also blanked Nashville on Tuesday and Phoenix two days
later.

"He's playing great," Vancouver's Ryan Kesler said. "You can't
say enough about him. They had some extremely good passes
cross-ice, and Louie was there all night."

"He's definitely found his groove," Canucks coach Alain
Vigneault said. "He's playing with a lot of confidence, and the
guys in front of him are also doing a lot of good things out
there - blocking shots, blocking lanes when they need to.
Obviously, it's a combination of a few things that he's on a
roll right now."

Defenseman Sami Salo scored a power-play goal and Daniel Sedin
also tallied for Vancouver, which has won five of its last
seven.

Niklas Backstrom made 27 saves for the Wild, who have lost two
of three contests.

"Our goalie was good, too," Lemaire said. "Let's put it this
way - I thought it was an exciting game. Every time we play
them, it's that type of game. It's exciting. It's a good game
to watch."

With Minnesota rookie Colton Gillies in the penalty box for
boarding, Salo gave Luongo all the support he needed. Fellow
defenseman Kevin Bieksa - who notched a pair of assists - sent a
cross-ice pass to Salo at the left point, and the Finn one-timed
it inside the left goalpost with 6:24 remaining in the first
period for his first goal of the season and a 1-0 lead.

"I didn't see it," Backstrom said. "I lost it on the way."

"My goal was kind of lucky," Salo said. "(Steve) Bernier gave a
good screen and just kind of screened him too much so that he
couldn't see the shot. It was obviously huge that we could get
the first goal."

Bieksa knew it was only a matter of time before Salo broke his
drought.

"He's been shooting the puck a lot," Bieksa said. "He's been
shooting it well. He's been having bad puck luck that everyone
gets every once in a while. It hasn't been going in for him.
Everyone has been encouraging him to keep shooting, and it seems
like he's been getting hot there."

Luongo took over from there, stopping Andrew Brunette on a
breakaway late in the second period.

"I was trying to cut back," Brunette said. "I tried to get it
through the five-hole. I'd like to have that back."

With just 17 seconds remaining in the session, the 29-year-old
turned aside Pierre-Marc Bouchard's one-timer.

"I thought at the start of the second period, we kind of started
taking over the game a little bit," Brunette said. "We just
weren't able to get one by him. He's playing with a lot of
confidence right now. We threw a lot of pucks at him, but he
made a lot of good saves."

"Roberto is on top of his game, and obviously, teams that are
coming in here are paying attention to his game right now,"
Vigneault said. "They're probably talking about it, and
sometimes when you overthink against a goaltender, it can be
challenging."

Sedin created some breathing room with 2:40 to go in the third.
After receiving a long pass from brother Henrik, the Swede got a
step on defenseman Martin Skoula for a breakaway and flicked the
puck over a sprawled Backstrom for his fifth goal of the season
and a 2-0 cushion.

Luongo's biggest stop in the third period also came against
Bouchard, as the netminder got his pad on the center's slap shot
with two minutes remaining to preserve the shutout.

"I guess they were throwing everything out at the net, and a
couple times, I was in desperation play," Luongo said.
"Luckily, the guy wasn't able to get (the puck) up and I got a
pad on it."

With the win, Vancouver improved to 3-1-0 on its six-game
homestand.

"Going into the season, we knew this stretch was going to be
big, especially early on," Kesler said. "You want to establish
yourself at home and set in stone that it's going to be tough to
play us in here."